ok yellow page ad and postcard again...last revision

Envious Eric

New member
OPINIONS on which of these three sound better...have to choose one...



1:

YellowpagesfinalAd.jpg




2:

YellowpagesAd2.jpg




3:

YellowpagesAd1.jpg




And here is the front of the postcard...opinions?

collage-1.jpg
 
Your going to scare away some with the cord of your buffer touching the fender on that black classic.



Also, read your ad and ask yourself why would anybody call you over the detail guy down the street.



How does your ad say your different, better, worth it more than anybody else?
 
The best point yet Superior Fine.



Why would this card make me pick you over the other guy.



By paying to print this, you are essentially paying it to sell for you. Make it sell to take the $10,000 and hire a outside salesperson for a few months to see if he can make something happen for you.
 
I still think that my 5 minute MS paint quickie looks better than any of those. Like I said in the previous post, your current format wouldn't pass the test in my mailbox. It would go straight into the trash can. I'm not sure why your stuck on this design, but go for whatever makes you happy then.



envyback.jpg


envyfront.jpg
 
I do not think your options look that bad. One and two are the most appealing to me. You may want to think about cleaning up the back by removing some or all of the pictures. There is enough information on the front side. How are you planning on distributing these postcards? That is just as important as the actual postcard layout. As for it separating you from other detailers; it looks professional. Here in Northern Virginia, we do not have any detailers sending out nice looking postcards in the mail. In fact, my coupon is the only one I have seen coming in the mail. I have had a good response with this method.
 
Let me preface this by saying that Eric contacted me in a PM to help him understand why I don't think his card passes the test. The following is my reply based on some experience with marketing small businesses. I decided to post this here to help everyone, not just Eric.



First off the area you live in is surrounded by very wealthy clientel. With Los Angeles to the North, San Diego to the south, and Riverside to the east, you have a very broad potential market. You need to realize this and hopefully this is the market you want to cater to.



Your customers are concerned only with filling their needs, and good advertising is always written with those needs in mind.



The better you understand your target audience and what their concerns are, the more effectively you can target your advertising.



Remember to ask yourself when reviewing your adverstising, “who cares?� Do most people really care about the processes used in the detail? Emphasize benefits, not features



Use language that your least informed customers might use, and make sure your ad is written in terms anyone can understand.



Now you need to differentiate yourself from the competition



Customers today have more products and services to choose from than ever. Effective advertising makes your service stand out in the buyer’s mind, and it convinces her that it is better and different than what the competition has to offer. Notice that I said her, because more than half your customers will be women. Would a woman like your present advertising?



This concept often is referred to as a “unique selling proposition.� In other words, what is it about your product or service that makes it unique? What do you offer that your competitors can’t? Why should customers do business with you when they can choose from a number of other competitors?



Use headlines to gain attention. Few customers will get to the body of the ad unless the headline grabs their attention first. Your headline must convey a benefit or your unique selling proposition.



Keep it short



The most effective advertising conveys your most important points as quickly and effectively as possible. To distill your thoughts, start by writing down everything you want to say about your service, keeping your target audience in mind the whole time.



Once you have your master list of benefits and features, prioritize them. What is the benefit you think your customer would be most interested in? What features of your service support that benefit? How would you convey these benefits and features in as few (but still powerful) words as possible?



Close with a call to action



Once you raise your customer’s interest in your service, spell out how they can move forward with procuring your service. Never assume a prospective customer will know what to do next. Tell them specifically:



Call Now!

Visit our website now!



Finally, read everything you write out loud. This final read-through will help you catch grammatical errors and awkward phrasing that may look fine on paper until you hear yourself say it. Restructure and reword sections that make you stumble so your readers don't stumble as well. It will provide the finishing touches to your carefully crafted advertising.



Now that the little blog on advertising is out of the way lets distill it down and look at your copy.




The front of the card just has pictures of cars. If I'm a woman looking at that it means nothing to me. Again, probably 3/4 of your clients will be women. As a man looking at your card, I really don't see anything special. The only remotely stand out pictures is of the Rolls Royce Phantom, and that has a picture of you in it and under a tent. If it was outside in the setting sun and looked absolutely dripping wet and shiney, then you would have something. Or if it was parked in front of a mansion or something.



Again...the pictures of you with the buffer and the vacuum show the process, not the results



None of the pictures show the benefits. The MDX comes close, but the house behind it and the reflection of the car in the side kill the picture. Look in car magazines, womens magazines, any magazine and see the pictures of the cars or other appliances. Most car pictures are taken at sunset with a "tobacco" filter on the lens or at least a polarizing filter on the lens. They are also taken at different angles and different distances. If you must include a picture on the front, pick one picture and make it a WOW picture.



On to the back of your card. I count 6 different fonts. That alone makes for an amateur looking attempt. Your Company name and logo are two of the smallest parts of the rear of the card. It should be the opposite. Think about investing the money in having a logo professional designed if you can't do it yourself. Your current logo looks like a microsoft wordart cut and pasted into the card. The little star/bullet hole things also serve no purpose.



Again..advertise the benefits of your services. Instead of "Available 7 days a week" doesn't it sound better to say "Your time is important, that's why we offer the convenience of appointments 7 days a week!"



Instead of "Mobile, We come to you" how about "We bring our services to you, so that you don't have to interupt your busy day"



It's all about selling the benefits to the consumer. Think of it like this. All TV's display a picture right? But yet everyone thinks they need a flat screen plasma or lcd tv that is at least 42 inches. As a detailer do you really need to spring for the $85 jar of Souveran when a $7.50 bottle of meguairs will do almost the same thing? Both are carnuba waxes, both will offer protection, but Souveran claims their benefits over the other waxes.



Think about it a bit and you will see it everywhere you go and in every commercial you see. It's tried and true and it works. Get your mom/wife/girlfriend/aunt/grandma/second cousing twice removed to proofread things and see if they appeal to a woman. Then the same for men. If you pass that test then go from there.



I hope this helps you in your quest! Talk to Mshu7 and see how much his wife will charge to help you out. His marketing and design is some of the best I've seen on this forum, and he accredits that to his wife helping him out.
 
BigChevMan said:
I hope this helps you in your quest! Talk to Mshu7 and see how much his wife will charge to help you out. His marketing and design is some of the best I've seen on this forum, and he accredits that to his wife helping him out.



BigChevMan,

My jaw dropped when I read this last paragraph! Thank you so much. I greatly appreciate the comments, and I know my wife will as well when I have her read it. :up



The rest of your post is awesome as well. Tons of great information! I think it would benefit everyone in this forum if your information could somehow be stickied...it's that good.
 
mshu7 said:
BigChevMan,

My jaw dropped when I read this last paragraph! Thank you so much. I greatly appreciate the comments, and I know my wife will as well when I have her read it. :up



The rest of your post is awesome as well. Tons of great information! I think it would benefit everyone in this forum if your information could somehow be stickied...it's that good.



I wish I could claim it all as my own. Just what I've gleamed from professionals



BTW...I may be contacting you/your wife to help me out with some ideas I'm working on for a business update if you will since I'm just across the border from you.
 
Bigchevman - that has got to be the most informative post I've ever read on a message board.



Far too long have I kept my pride in the way thinking that I know what I'm doing when it comes to advertising and marketing, only to read your post in about 5 minutes to erase that pride.
 
BigChevMan said:
Let me preface this by saying that Eric contacted me in a PM to help him understand why I don't think his card passes the test. The following is my reply based on some experience with marketing small businesses. I decided to post this here to help everyone, not just Eric.



Hey bigchevman,



Let's be truthful. The majority of your reply has been plagiarized, word for word, from the American Marketing Association website. Looks like you simply copied and claimed it as your own writing. I am sure we all agree that Eric deserved an honest reply, written in your own words, rather than something plagiarized.



MarketingPower.com

Writing Copy that Sells.

Writing Copy that Sells - American Marketing Association - wwww.marketingpower.com
 
mirrorfinishman said:
Hey bigchevman,



Let's be truthful. The majority of your reply has been plagiarized, word for word, from the American Marketing Association website. Looks like you simply copied and claimed it as your own writing. I am sure we all agree that Eric deserved an honest reply, written in your own words, rather than something plagiarized.



MarketingPower.com

Writing Copy that Sells.

Writing Copy that Sells - American Marketing Association - wwww.marketingpower.com



:laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh:

First off if your read the whole post you will see where I state the following:



BigChevMan said:
I wish I could claim it all as my own. Just what I've gleamed from professionals



Thanks for trying to bash me Frank, but it's not going to work. Your post has no useful purpose but to try and cause trouble. I'm just trying to be helpful by adding examples for the detailing world and my own experiences to already known and proven sucessful tips that have been around a lot longer that the American Marketing Association.



I never once claimed it was my own words. I think it is a very honest and helpful reply. I could have lied and said that it was all my doing, but that wouldn't be smart on my part. Your reply...well the same can't be said about that.



But in any event it's not like it's only on their website. For the record I didn't get it from their website, I've never been there..but it looks like good info. Thanks for the link!



I got it from a couple different marketing "guru" blogs. If you do a search for Ad Marketing tips for small businesses the first 100 links will all say the same thing. The point is that it is just a list of common things in marketing, and I added my own info to it as well to help.
 
Was there really a need to trash this thread like that? It's good information regardless of who it came from. Why someone can't leave it at that is beyond me. Maybe this should have been handled via PM.
 
So back to the topic now.....



I think the first one is the best, but as mentioned, how will it actually get you business and not get tossed in the trash?



It looks really nice and professional, but word of mouth is what you need, not post cards. :bigups
 
JoshVette said:
So back to the topic now.....



I think the first one is the best, but as mentioned, how will it actually get you business and not get tossed in the trash?



It looks really nice and professional, but word of mouth is what you need, not post cards. :bigups

Most do get tossed in the trash, however, a small percentage will call and demand your services. Some of those will become regular or repeat customers. This is my own experience doing direct mail. Word of mouth is great, but it progresses too slow. You always have to advertise to make people aware that you exist.
 
The one thing that strikes me is Envious Detailing takes up an awful lot of space and is the main thing you see when you read it. Again, alot of biz owners like to see there company name bold and big in there marketing pieces, but really it should be in small letters at the bottom of the card. No offense, but alot of valubale space is being lost to the company name and people just don't care what your company name is. Your company name doesn't sell, alot of whats in bigchevs post is what makes the phone ring.
 
mirrorfinishman said:
Justin,



My mistake. I only read your original post and not your additional post about not claiming it as your own. Please accept my sincere apology.



No problem. I got a little worked up over it, but yesterday was a bad day all around. And I'm serious. Thanks for the link to that site. It's a really great site! :woot2:
 
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